Who is the Colorado Criminal Justice Reform Coalition?

Our mission is to reverse the trend of mass incarceration in Colorado. We are a coalition of nearly 7,000 individual members and over 100 faith and community organizations who have united to stop perpetual prison expansion in Colorado through policy and sentence reform.

Our chief areas of interest include drug policy reform, women in prison, racial injustice, the impact of incarceration on children and families, the problems associated with re-entry and stopping the practice of using private prisons in our state.

So it came as no surprise to those who study the nation's prisons that racial slurs aimed at blacks by a group of white supremacists may have set off the riot that left two dead at a Florence prison Sunday.

"It's an incredibly volatile mix," said Mark Pitcavage, director of investigative research for the Anti-Defamation League, who has studied prison gangs and extremist groups. "You can have people killed, literally, over nothing." Racist comments, he added, would be considered among inmates as "a definite provocation."

Bureau of Prisons officials declined to comment Tuesday on what exactly occurred before Sunday's riot, or on the prevalence of gangs or white supremacist groups at the prison.

But a 2001 report by Bureau of Prisons researchers studied at least two dozen active gangs in the country's federal prisons, with many of those groups having multiple subgroups. The study determined that of a group of about 82,000 inmates, about 9 percent, or 7,400, were identified as gang members.

Majority not in gangs

Membership levels varied from full-fledged members - including some who have to kill to join - to "associates," or inmates who conduct business or look out for the interests of the gang but haven't joined, or can't join because of their race.

Inmates affiliated with gangs were more likely to be violent, the study found. Many prison-gang members enter a facility with an established affiliation. Others join up once inside, sometimes for protection.

But Pitcavage said it is a myth that all prisoners are in a gang. The majority of people in the prison system are not, he said. Instead, they simply choose to align themselves with members of their same race. In some cases, racially separate gangs - including white supremacists and Hispanic gangs - will work together to sell drugs or commit other crimes, forming alliances against other races.

3 comments:

Gang percentages are allegedly much higher in state prison than in the federal BOP. This makes sense.

A big share of federal criminal cases are white collar criminals, independent immigration violators, or drug users with large personal supplies, and prison warden's don't consider you to be a gang member if you went to college and don't have tattoos.

What an assanine article. I've been in prison and blacks are constantly directing derogatory coments at whites, yet they are never called black supremacists. White inmates however, after utterring one racial comment are "white supremacists". As a white guy I would have been dead had I not allied myself with my race as is the case with other races. The ADL would have you believe that there is a vast white conspiracy spread throughout the land and that we must be constantly looking over our shoulders for Aryan Brotherhood members on the street. The reality is that they are looking out for the biggest group of supremacists around...themselves.